Rift (video game)

Rift

Standard edition cover art
Developer(s) Trion Worlds
Publisher(s) Trion Worlds
Engine Gamebryo
Version 30-14a
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows
Release date(s) NA March 1, 2011[1]
AU 20110302March 2, 2011
EU 20110304March 4, 2011
Genre(s) Fantasy MMORPG
Mode(s) Multiplayer
Rating(s)
Media/distribution Download, optical disc
System requirements

See Development section for requirements matrix

Rift (previously known as Rift: Planes of Telara) is a fantasy-themed massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) from Trion Worlds, which was released in March 2011.[1]

Contents

Gameplay

Setting

Rift is a MMORPG set in a fantasy world called Telara, which is the focal point of several different elemental Planes. These Planes are realities representing the elemental forces of Air, Fire, Water, Earth, Life, and Death, and it is at the one point where every one of these Planes intersect with each other that Telara exists. Each Plane is governed by a Dragon-deity, which is the personification of that elemental force. Through the actions of the Dragon of Extinction, Regulos, the various Dragons have united in an alliance known as the Blood Storm, for the purpose of invading Telara and gaining use of the intersection of all of their realms. In the past, the Blood Storm was defeated by the inhabitants of Telara with the help of the Vigil, the most powerful of the native gods of Telara.

Regulos was cast out into the elemental Planes, while its five compatriots were trapped within Telara and chained beneath a Ward designed to close Telara off from external threats. However, recently, Regulos has gained entry to Telara, destroying the Ward and causing Rifts to open to the elemental Planes, feeding the strength of the trapped Dragons and allowing their servants to enter in a bid to destroy Telara's defenders. Opposing Regulos within Telara are two factions: the Guardians and the Defiant. The conflict between these two factions serves as another source of tension and gameplay. Players have the role of Ascended, superhuman resurrected warriors whose task is to defeat the forces of Regulos and cleanse Telara forever of the threat of the Blood Storm.[4]

The Guardians are the pious followers the religion of the Vigil, the supreme gods of Telara. They include the high elves, the Mathosians (a warlike culture of humans from the north), and dwarves. Ascended Guardians were resurrected by the Vigil after dying at the hands of Regulos during its return to Telara. Players of Guardians fight and die against one of Regulos' commanders, only to be brought back at the beginning of Rift.

The Defiant are those who, for cultural, historic, or personal reasons, do not follow the religion of the Vigil and have put their trust in science and technology as a way to conquer the forces of Regulos. They include the Eth (a highly advanced human culture from the south), the Bahmi (descendants of interbreeding between Air spirits and humans), and the Kelari (animistic, cabalistic dark elves). Ascended Defiant were resurrected through technology based on the study of the soul-structure of Ascended Guardians in an apocalyptic future in which Telara has nearly been consumed by Regulos. At the beginning of the game, players of Defiant are sent back in time from this point to the beginning of Rift, allowing them to fight at an opportune moment in Telara's timeline, to overthrow the religion of the Vigil and defeat Regulos.

Rifts

Rifts are areas of elemental instability that represent the intrusion of elemental planes into the land of Telara. Once opened, these rifts begin to spawn monsters that proceed to march towards important points on the map. It is then up to players to defeat these monsters and to close the rift. If rifts are left unchecked, the invading monsters will eventually conquer large portions of the map, killing and significantly impairing the players in that area. Entering the area surrounding the rift will trigger a prompt that allows the player to join a public group, rather than forcing the player to manually create a group. Players sealing the rift are rewarded for many things including healing, attacking and buffing. The severity and locations of the rifts are entirely dynamic. Rifts of six different types (earth, fire, air, water, life, and death) are possible, and rifts of different types will oppose each other. In addition, Non-player characters hostile to the player may engage rift invaders.

Character Customization

Classes

Each character chooses between four different callings: Warrior, Cleric, Rogue, or Mage. Each eventually gains access to nine (when counting the pvp soul each calling can get) different 'souls' from that calling, which have trees to which they can allocate a number of points gained each level. Rift's soul trees have two levels: branches, which are the specific abilities/bonuses that the player allocates the points to, and roots, which are the soul's base abilities that are unlocked as the player allocates a certain number of points into the branches. All races may become all classes.

The soul system allows players to customize their characters to a high degree. The player chooses three souls from within their calling, and allocates earned points into talent trees for each soul. A player wishing to tank may select justicar for its defensive properties and ability to heal the group as it deals damage, sentinel to increase his healing capabilities, and shaman to increase his melee damage output (thus increasing the amount of damage-based healing and threat generation). A character may have both justicar and sentinel, but have more points allocated into sentinel than justicar, and then choose warden as the third soul for its burst damage and heal-over-time spells, to make the character more of a healer than a tank.

Players may also keep up to five different soul configurations (called roles), which may be activated whenever the player is not in combat, meaning a player can switch from a healer to a damage dealer as the group needs. Because the player's abilities come from the points allocated in the soul trees, two roles that share no souls will have no abilities or bonuses in common with each other. This allows players a greater degree of versatility then is normally allowed in MMORPGs. These combinations allow players to play multiple roles in PvE, party, and raid gameplay. Therefore, a rogue could either do ranged or melee dps, off heal, or tank. Clerics, unlike in other MMO's allows for damaging and tanking abilities, instead of being confined exclusively to heals. Mages are still the only class though that is left without melee souls; their gameplay revolves mostly around pet classes, damage over time, and direct damage. Warriors can only fulfill two roles, of either damage or tanking, lacking a support soul like the other classes.

Physical Appearance

Rift's character customization allows players to alter specific aspects of their avatars. Characters may change hairstyles, facial features, height, sex, tattoos, and skin colors during character creation. Once set, these attributes cannot be changed in game. Each race has a limited skin color palette and set of race-specific features. For example, the Bahmi's hairstyles for females include numerous bald or almost-bald options while the high elves have hairstyles that contain flowers. You can also customize the appearance of all armor by applying a coloured dye or by using the appearance of another item. Rift also features an expansive wardrobe system. If a player finds a particular piece of equipment that pleases them visually, they can equip it in a wardrobe slot that overwrites currently equipped items, visual model. For each wardrobe slot, a player can equip alternate gloves, shoulders, boots, pants, and chest pieces. There are various vanity items that players receive for completing dungeons, quests, or rift events in game. All together, the player can purchase up to four wardrobe slots, with the price of each subsequent slot increasing substantially.

Weapons

At launch, Rift included approximately 12,000 [5] weapons which you could equip to your character. Weapon rarities are common (white), uncommon (green), rare (blue), epic (purple), and relic (orange).

Subscription

After initial purchase, Rift requires a monthly subscription fee for continued play, or buying prepaid game cards for a selected amount of playing time.[6]

Development

System requirements
Minimum Recommended
Windows[7]
Operating system Windows XP, Windows Vista or Windows 7
CPU Dual Core 2.0 GHz Core 2 Duo 2.2 GHz
Memory 2 GB RAM 4 GB RAM
Hard drive space 15 GB free HD space
Graphics hardware Nvidia GeForce FX 5900, ATI/AMD Radeon X300, Intel GMA X4500 with DirectX®: 9.0c, June 2010 update Nvidia GTS 250 or Nvidia GTX 200M with DirectX®: 9.0c, June 2010 update
Sound hardware DirectX 8.1 compliant card
Network Broadband internet connection

Rift has been in development since 2006 and has undergone extensive alpha testing, with beta testing finalizing the stress test portion of development.[8] Trion Worlds CEO Lars Buttler has stated that Rift has a budget of "over US$50 million".[9]

A trailer featuring game footage was released for the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) in late May 2009 and was featured on the 2009 Spike TV Video Game Trailers program.[10] The preview was viewed favorably by 1UP.com.[11]

Reception

The game has been well received by critics, currently holding an overall score of 85.07% on Gamerankings based on 28 reviews.[12] GamingExcellence gave the game an 8.2/10, calling it "one of the best MMOs released in years."[13] PC Gamer UK gave the game an 85/100 saying the game is "Absolutely colossal, Rift aims high and hits its mark, proving that there’s room to grow within the traditional MMO format."[14] GameSpy gave the game a 4/5, but with the reviewer stating that "Rift itself merely delivers commendable refinement" and also questions "how well its initially refreshing concepts will hold up after months of playtime"[15] IGN gave the game an 8.5/10, stating that "soul building is very flexible and rifts are great fun" and that although "there's not a lot of originality[,] [...] everything works exactly as it should"; and concluding that "Telara is a worthy alternative to Azeroth for anyone looking to explore a new world."[16] GameZone gave the game an 8.5/10, stating "For what RIFT tries to do, it does very well. I rarely felt bored with all the random events and rifts constantly breaking up the monotony of questing. It’s also important to give Trion a tremendous amount of credit for releasing such a “complete” MMO."[17] At the 2011 Game Developers Conference in Austin, Texas, RIFT won awards for Best New Online Game and Best Online Technology [18]

Content Updates

Like many MMORPGs, Rift periodically provides content updates, also known as patches, to continue to provide subscribers new activities to perform in the game over time. In addition to presenting new dungeons to explore and new treasure to obtain, patches are also used to re-calibrate the design and functionality of the game's existing features.[19]

Patch 1.0- Planes of Telara

Release Date: February 24, 2011[20]

Level Cap: 50

This was the "launch" version of the game, featuring the world of Telara and six different types of rifts (earth, fire, water, air, life, and death) that randomly spawn monsters to challenge the players. At launch, Telara held eleven zones, ten dungeons, and two cities.[21] The game contained one raid, Greenscale's Blight,[22] and four warfronts.[23] Starting at approximately level 20, players could access an extensive quest line (known as the Saga of the Endless) that would guide them through content during the leveling process, through expert dungeons, expert rifts, and raid rifts at level 50, and finally to the Greenscale's Blight 20-player raid.[24]

Patch 1.1- River of Souls

Release Date: March 30, 2011[25]

This update held a world event that emphasized death rifts and added a new 20-player raid, The River of Souls.[26]

Patch 1.2- Spoils of War

Release Date: May 10, 2011[27]

This update emphasized earth and fire rifts. It also introduced crafting rifts, a 5th role, slivers, and a new 10-player raid, Gilded Prophecy.[28]

Patch 1.3- Waves of Madness

Release Date: June 22, 2011[29][30]

This update emphasized water and death rifts and introduced a new 20-player raid, Hammerknell.[31] The game also introduced guild banks and synergy crystals; a new type of item that provides a customized bonus to raid-level gear.[32]

Patch 1.4- Legacy of the Fallen

Release Date: August 3, 2011

This update emphasized life and water rifts. This update introduced PvP rifts, alternate warfront, cross-shard LFG tool, a new epic quest line, and a new 10-player raid, Drowned Halls.

Patch 1.5- Ashes of History

Release Date: 28th of Sept 2011(US), Sept/Oct (EU)

Features new content such as Chronicles which are entry level dungeons made for 1 to 2 players and advance the story. Veteran rewards that reward players for the amount of time they have been playing RIFT and it includes the new Planar Attunement which allows level 50 players to advance their roles further and choose what Plane they will specialize in.

Patch 1.6- Ember Isle

Release Date: 16th of Nov 2011(US), (EU)

Features new zone called Ember Isle, two new tier 2 raid rifts, a new 10-player raid, a new 5 player dungeon with two completely different versions, a new alternate warfront, and the unlocking of the 2nd tier planar attunement.

References

  1. ^ a b "RIFT - RIFT™ SET TO LAUNCH MARCH 1, 2011". Trion Worlds, Inc.. 2011-01-04. http://www.riftgame.com/en/news/listings/010411_preorder.php. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 
  2. ^ "Entertainment Software Rating Board - Rift". Entertainment Software Rating Board. http://www.esrb.org/ratings/synopsis.jsp?Certificate=30423. Retrieved 2011-03-19. 
  3. ^ "OLFC Classification Database". Commonwealth of Australia. 2010-12-08. http://www.classification.gov.au/www/cob/find.nsf/5c2433d416948a0bca25759f00820d25/4bcbc027a2932a50ca2577f30057e65e?OpenDocument. Retrieved 2011-03-19. 
  4. ^ "RIFT - Factions". Trion Games. http://www.riftgame.com/en/factions/index.php. Retrieved 2011-03-19. 
  5. ^ "RIFT - Weapons Database". http://www.gameshampoo.com/database/rift/weaponsdb.php. Retrieved 2011-03-25. 
  6. ^ "RIFT - Subscription Information". Trion Worlds, Inc.. http://www.riftgame.com/en/products/subscriptions.php. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 
  7. ^ "RIFT - Frequently Asked Questions". Trion Worlds, Inc.. http://www.riftgame.com/en/game/faq.php#top. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 
  8. ^ Bowens, Cindy (2010-11-23). "VIP Code Distribution‎". http://forums.riftgame.com/showthread.php?6254-VIP-Code-Distribution&p=186862&viewfull=1#post186862. Retrieved 2011-03-21. 
  9. ^ Crossley, Rob (2010-08-27). "Trion’s first game budget ‘over $50m’". http://www.develop-online.net/news/35733/Trions-first-game-budget-over-50m. Retrieved 2011-03-21. "Rift: Planes of Telara is already very ambitious because it is over $50 million in development" 
  10. ^ Keighley, Geoff (2009-05-29). "E3 2009 Preview Special — May 29, 2009". GameTrailers TV with Geoff Keighley. GameTrailers.com. http://www.gametrailers.com/episode/gametrailers-tv/61?ch=1&sd=0. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 
  11. ^ Bailey, Kat (2010-10-20). "Rift: PoT Preview for PC". 1UP.com. UGO Networks. http://www.1up.com/previews/rift-planes-telara-mmo-solo. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 
  12. ^ "Rift for PC". GameRankings. CBS Interactive Inc.. http://www.gamerankings.com/pc/995594-rift/index.html. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 
  13. ^ Coulter, Alex (2011-03-10). "Rift PC Review". GamingExcellence. Auracore MediaWorks. http://www.gamingexcellence.com/pc/games/2456/review.shtml. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 
  14. ^ Cooper, Jonathan (2011-03-16). "Rift review". PC Gamer. Future Publishing Limited. http://www.pcgamer.com/2011/03/16/rift-review. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 
  15. ^ Johnson, Jeremiah (2011-03-16). "Rift Review". GameSpy. IGN Entertainment, Inc.. http://pc.gamespy.com/pc/heroes-of-telara/1156058p1.html. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 
  16. ^ http://pc.ign.com/articles/115/1152717p1.html
  17. ^ http://mmorpg.gamezone.com/reviews/item/rift/
  18. ^ http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/37859/GDC_Online_Rift_Minecraft_Top_2011_Game_Developers_Online_Choice_Awards.php
  19. ^ "Rift Patch Notes Database", Trion Worlds
  20. ^ "Beta-to-Head Start Patch Notes", Trion Worlds, 2/24/11
  21. ^ "Rift Zones", Trion Worlds
  22. ^ "Rift Warfronts", Trion Worlds
  23. ^ "Rift Warfronts", Trion Worlds
  24. ^ "The Saga of the Endless Quest Guide", ZAM Rift
  25. ^ "Rift 1.1", Trion Worlds, 3/30/11
  26. ^ "The River of Souls", Trion Worlds
  27. ^ "Rift 1.2", Trion Worlds, 5/10/11
  28. ^ "Spoils of War", Trion Worlds
  29. ^ "Rift 1.3 Preview", Trion Worlds, 6/07/11
  30. ^ "Rift 1.3 Patch Notes", Trion Worlds, 6/22/11
  31. ^ "Rift 1.3 Preview", Trion Worlds, 6/07/11
  32. ^ "Rift 1.3 Patch will add Armor Sets to Telara", PC Gamer, 6/22/11

External links